Methods and apparatus to monitor advertisement exposure are disclosed. An example method includes determining via a meter that a media content segment was presented at a media content presentation device and determining via an activity monitor different than the meter that a computing resource related to the media content segment was accessed by outputting an indication of an association between the computing resource access and the media content presentation after the presentation of the media content segment.
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1. A method for monitoring media, the method comprising:
analyzing identifying data associated with a media segment to determine whether the media segment was presented at a media presentation device, the identifying data received from a meter;
accessing activity data indicating an occurrence of an activity on a computing device, the activity data received from an activity monitor separate from the meter; and
associating the identifying data with the activity data if the activity occurred within a threshold period of time after presentation of the media segment and an identifier related to the media segment is contained in the activity data.
9. A system for monitoring media, the system comprising:
a generator to analyze identifying data associated with a media segment to determine whether the media segment was presented at a media presentation device, the identifying data received from a meter;
a window selector to access activity data indicating an occurrence of an activity on a computing device, the activity data received from an activity monitor separate from the meter; and
a comparator to associate the identifying data with the activity data if the activity occurred within a threshold period of time after presentation of the media segment and an identifier related to the media segment is contained in the activity data.
16. A tangible computer-readable storage medium comprising instructions that, when executed, cause a machine to at least:
analyze identifying data associated with a media segment to determine whether the media segment was presented at a media presentation device, the identifying data received from a meter;
access activity data indicating an occurrence of an activity on a computing device, the activity data received from an activity monitor separate from the meter; and
associate the identifying data with the activity data if the activity occurred within a threshold period of time after presentation of the media segment and an identifier related to the media segment is contained in the activity data.
23. A method for monitoring media, the method comprising:
analyzing identifying data associated with a media segment to determine whether the media segment was presented at a media presentation device, the identifying data received from a meter;
accessing activity data indicating an occurrence of an activity on a computing device, the activity data received from an activity monitor separate from the meter, wherein the activity data indicates a purchase made by a user; and
associating the identifying data with the purchase if the activity data indicates that the purchase occurred within a threshold period of time after presentation of the media segment and an identifier related to the media segment is contained in the activity data.
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outputting an indication of the association between the identifying data associated with the media segment and the activity data; and
storing the indication in an electronic storage device.
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10. A system as defined in
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17. A computer-readable storage medium as defined in
18. A computer-readable storage medium as defined in
19. A computer-readable storage medium as defined in
20. A computer-readable storage medium as defined in
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22. A computer-readable storage medium as defined in
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This patent is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/204,297, now U.S. Pat. No. 8,302,120, filed on Sep. 4, 2008, entitled “METHODS AND APPARATUS TO MONITOR ADVERTISEMENT EXPOSURE,” which claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 61/029,744, filed Feb. 19, 2008, entitled “METHODS AND APPARATUS TO MONITOR IN-HOME ADVERTISEMENT EXPOSURE,” both of which are hereby incorporated by reference in their entireties.
The present disclosure pertains to monitoring media content and, more particularly, to methods and apparatus to monitor advertisement exposure.
Consumers are exposed to advertisements via many different sources. An example source of advertisements is television broadcasts. There are currently many methods for monitoring advertisements to determine how many consumers were exposed to advertisements. For example, a monitoring system may determine the number and identity of consumers in the same room as a source that is presenting media content (e.g., a television showing a television advertisement). Using this information an interested party can determine the number and demographics of consumers that were exposed to a particular advertisement
Businesses that advertise products and services can analyze the effectiveness of advertisements by analyzing sales information prior-to and after advertisements have been presented. For example, a business can determine that an advertisement is effective if sales of a product or service increased following an advertisement. This analysis can be performed at a global, national, or market level depending on how specifically advertisement and sales information is monitored.
The source of media content 102 of the illustrated example is one of a cable television network, an over-the-air distribution television network, or a satellite television distribution network that provides media content to the household 104. Of course, the source of the media content 102 may alternatively include more than one source of media content and may include any other type of distribution system. For example, the source of media content 102 may include internet distributed media content (e.g., video and/or audio), a radio distribution network (e.g., satellite, over-the-air, etc.), a physical medium based media distribution network (e.g., media content distributed on a compact disc, a digital versatile/video disc, a flash memory, a Blu-ray™ disc, etc.), or any other type of distribution network.
The household 104 of the illustrated example is a home in which a user uses the computer 110 (e.g., to consume media content, to browse the internet, etc.) and consumes media content at a television 112. While the household 104 of the illustrated example is a home, the household 104 may alternatively be a business location, a public location (e.g., a library), etc.
The example household 104 includes the computer 110, the television 112, a receiver 114, a meter 116, a home network 118, and a home server 120.
The computer 110 of the illustrated example is a personal computer that allows a user to consume media content, browse the internet, and execute applications. The computer 110 of the illustrated example may be a personal computer, a laptop computer, a personal digital assistant, a video gaming system, a mobile phone, a cellular phone, or any other type of computing device.
The computer 110 of the illustrated example includes an activity monitor 122. The example activity monitor 122 is implemented by software installed on the computer 110 that monitors the activity of a user of the computer and transmits information about the activity to the home server 120. For example, the activity monitor 122 monitors a user's offline activity (e.g., exposure to and/or consumption of media content, executing applications, etc.) and a user's online activity (e.g., browsing webpages on the internet). The software for the example activity monitor 122 may be software installed by a representative of a monitoring organization, software installed by a user that downloads the software from the internet, a plug-in executed in a browser, software that is installed by a user that installs the software from a storage medium (e.g., a floppy disk, a compact disc, a digital versatile disc, a flash memory, etc.), or by any other means. While the example activity monitor 122 is implemented by software installed on the computer 110, the activity monitor 122 may alternatively be implemented by a standalone monitoring device that is associated with the computer (e.g., a device physically attached to the computer or a device that includes sensors that monitor the computer without being attached to the computer (e.g., a camera)). Additionally or alternatively, the activity monitor 122 may be integrated with another device (e.g., the home server 120 or the meter 116). Example implementations of the activity monitor 122 are described in further detail in conjunction with
The television 112 of the illustrated example receives media content for presentation from the example receiver 114. The example receiver 114 (e.g., a set top box) receives media content from the content sources 102 and transmits the content to the television 112 in a format that the television can accept. For example, the receiver 114 may receive satellite broadcast signals, decode the satellite broadcast signals, decrypt the decoded signals, convert the decrypted signals to a digital television signal, and transmit the digital television signal to the television. Alternatively, the system 100 may not include a receiver 114 and the television 112 may receive media content directly from the content sources 102. While the television 112 and the receiver 114 have been described as handling television signals (e.g., audio and video), the system 100 may additionally or alternatively handle other types of media content such as, for example, radio, internet media content broadcasts/streams, etc.
The meter 116 of the illustrated example monitors media content transmitted from the receiver 114 to the television 112. Among other things, the example meter 116 analyzes the received media content to extract advertisements and/or identifying information associated with advertisements and sends the extracted information to the home server 120. While the example meter 116 receives media content transmitted from the receiver 114 to the television 112 via a splitter or the like, the meter 116 may alternatively receive presented media content from the television 112 (e.g., using an output of the television 112, using a camera directed at the television 112, by detecting audio output by the television or by extracting one or more program identification codes associated with the media content and/or a characteristic signature of the media content, etc.) and/or media content directly from the content sources 102. Additionally or alternatively, the meter 116 may be capable of detecting the state of the television 112 (e.g., whether the television is turned on or off) and/or of detecting and/or analyzing information about people watching the television and/or in the vicinity of the television.
An example implementation of the meter 116 is described in conjunction with
The home network 118 of the illustrated example enables communication between network elements in the household 104. For example, the home network 118 communicatively couples the computer 110, the activity monitor 122, the meter 116, and the home server 120. In addition, the home network of the illustrated example communicatively couples the network elements in the household 104 to the communication network 106 (e.g., the internet). For example, the home network 118 includes a gateway device that communicates with the communication network 106 via a service provider. While the example home network 118 is a local area network, the home network 118 may be implemented by any type of wired or wireless network such as, for example, a wireless network implemented according to Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) standard 802.11, a Bluetooth® wireless network, an Ethernet network, a cellular telephone network, any other type of wide area network, any other type of local area network, etc.
The home server 120 of the illustrated example receives monitoring information (e.g., advertising information, program identification information, tuning information, etc.) from the meter 116 and activity information from the activity monitor 122 and stores the received information. The example home server 120 of the illustrated example includes a database for storing received information. Alternatively, as described in further detail herein, the home server 120 may include any type of storage. The home server 120 of the illustrated example periodically or aperiodically transmits received information to the central facility 108. For example, the home server 120 may transmit the information according to a schedule, when the database is full, when a desired amount of information has been stored, upon a request from a user, upon a request from the central facility 108, etc.
While the example home server 120 is illustrated as a stand-alone server located in the household 104, the home server 120 may be integrated with another device in the household 104 or may be located at a location different from the household 104. For example, the capabilities of the home server 120 may be integrated with the computer 110 (e.g., software implementing the home server 120 may be installed on the computer 110).
An example implementation of the home server 120 is described in further detail in conjunction with
The communication network 106 of the illustrated example enables communication between the home network 118 and the central facility 108. In addition, the example communication network 106 enables communication to the internet from the home network 118. While the example communication network 106 is a wide area network, the communication network 106 may be implemented by any type of wired or wireless network such as, for example, a wireless network implemented according to Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) standard 802.11, a Bluetooth® wireless network, an Ethernet network, a cellular telephone network, any type of service provider network, any other type of wide area network, and/or any other type of local area network.
The central facility 108 of the illustrated example receives monitoring information associated with the household 104 from the home server 120. The example central facility 108 analyzes the received monitoring information to determine ratings information (e.g., how many people were presented with the advertisement or a program with which the advertisement is associated, how many people of a particular demographic were presented with the advertisement, and/or program etc.) for advertisements and/or programs presented at the household 104 and to associate advertisement information with activity information logged by the activity monitor 122. For example, the example central facility 108 selects an advertisement and compares metadata associated with the advertisement to activity information that was logged within a desired timeframe (e.g., a 24-hour window) from the presentation of the advertisement. Based on the comparison, the example central facility 108 determines if the advertisement can be associated with any of the activity information (e.g., an advertisement for a computer maker can be associated with a visit to the website associated with the computer maker and/or with a competitor of the computer maker). The example central facility 108 then generates reports indicating the ratings information and/or the association between the advertisement information and the activity information.
An example implementation of the central facility is described in conjunction with
The digitizer 202 of the illustrated example receives media content presented on a television (e.g., media content transmitted from the receiver 114 to the television 112 of
The example segment analyzer 204 receives digitized segments of media content from the digitizer 202 and determines if the segment contains one or more commercials. The example segment analyzer 204 may use any type of available analysis to determine if commercials are present. Example techniques include:
The advertisement detector 206 of the illustrated example receives information from the segment analyzer 204 and detects whether the information indicates that an advertisement is present in a segment. For example, the example advertisement detector 206 weighs the results of some or all of the techniques used by the segment analyzer 204 to determine if the results indicate that one or more advertisements are present. If the advertisement extractor 206 determines that an advertisement is present, the advertisement detector 206 sends the segment and an identification to the advertisement detector 210. For example, the advertisement detector 206 may send an identification including the time or index of the start of each advertisement and the time or index of the end of each advertisement in the segment. If the advertisement detector 206 determines that a commercial is not present in the segment (i.e., the segment is a media content program), the segment is transmitted to the program analyzer 208 instead of the advertisement extractor 210.
When the program analyzer 208 of the illustrated example receives a segment from the advertisement detector 206 (e.g., when the segment does not include an advertisement), it analyzes the segment to extract information for determining the identity and/or source of the program. For example, the program analyzer 208 of the illustrated example extracts program codes using the Nielsen Active/Passive (A/P) encoding system. The codes may be program identification headers (PIDs) associated with digital television broadcasts or codes used for other purposes such as audience measurement. Alternatively, any technique for identifying media content programs and/or generating, extracting, and/or computing identifying information may be used. The example program analyzer 208 transmits the extracted information to the data transmitter 218. The example program analyzer 208 of the illustrated example then deletes the segment. Alternatively, the program analyzer 208 may store the segment for later analysis and/or may transmit the segment to the data transmitter 218.
When the advertisement extractor 210 of the illustrated example receives a segment from the advertisement extractor 206 (e.g., when the segment includes an advertisement), it extracts the advertisement from the segment. In other words, the example advertisement extractor 210 separates the portion of the segment associated with the advertisement from any portion(s) of the segment not associated with the advertisement. The advertisement extractor 210 then transmits the advertisement to the compressor 212, the signature extractor 214, the code collector 215, and the metadata builder 216 of the illustrated example. Additionally or alternatively, the advertisement extractor 210 may extract a portion of an advertisement from another segment that is adjacent to the current segment in time (e.g., a segment prior to the current segment or a segment following the current segment) if an advertisement is detected at the edge of a segment. While the example implementations of the meter 116 includes an advertisement extractor 210, alternative implementation of the meter 116 may not extract advertisements from segments and, thus, may not include the advertisement extractor 210.
The compressor 212 of the illustrated example receives the extracted advertisement from the advertisement extractor 210 and compresses the audio and video associated with the advertisement to reduce the amount of storage space needed to store the advertisement. For example, the compressor 212 may decrease the resolution of the advertisement, may decrease the color-depth of the advertisement, may eliminate frames from the advertisement (e.g., keep only every fourth frame), may transcode the content to a compressed encoding (e.g., encode the content in a Motion Pictures Experts Group (MPEG) compressed format), etc. The compressed advertisement is sent to the data transmitter 218 and thereafter transmitted to a home server (e.g., the home server 120 of
The signature extractor 214 of the illustrated example receives an advertisement from the advertisement extractor 210 and extracts and/or generates a signal representative of the advertisement (e.g., a fingerprint or signature) that preferably uniquely identifies the advertisement. In the illustrated example, the signature extractor 214 extracts one or more of an audio signature, a video signature, and/or a closed captioning signature from the advertisement. The signature extractor 214 sends the extracted signature to the data transmitter 118 for later transmission to, and analysis by, a central facility (e.g., the central facility 108 of
The code collector 215 of the illustrated example receives an advertisement from the advertisement extractor and extracts codes associated with the media content. The code collector 215 may extract any type of code associated with the advertisement such as, for example, a watermark, a PID header, or any other information embedded in the media content, etc. and/or may retrieve identifying information from an external source (e.g., retrieve identifying information from the receiver 116 of
The metadata builder 216 of the illustrated example requests and/or receives information about the advertisement extracted by the advertisement extractor 206 and sends the metadata information to the data transmitter 218. The example metadata information includes any information that: a) identifies the source of the advertisement, b) identifies the television channel or network on which the advertisement was shown, c) identifies the duration of the advertisement, d) identifies the time at which the advertisement was presented, e) identifies a user viewing the content, f) identifies a user's activity associated with the content (e.g., fast-forwarding through the advertisement), etc. For example, the example metadata builder 216 receives information from a signal transmitted from a receiver to a television (e.g., from the receiver 114 to the television 112) including the channel to which the receiver is tuned and any user activity associated with the advertisement. In addition, the example metadata builder 216 extracts information from the received advertisement such as the duration of the advertisement and the time at which the advertisement was presented. The example metadata builder 216 sends the collected metadata to the data transmitter 218 for association with the data from the compressor 212, the signature extractor 214 and/or the code collector 215.
The data transmitter 218 of the illustrated example receives information from the program analyzer 208, the compressor 212, the signature extractor 214, and/or the metadata builder 216 and transmits the information to a remote location (e.g., the home server 120 of
The offline activity monitor 302 of the illustrated example logs activity at a computer (e.g., the computer 110 of
The online activity monitor 304 of the illustrated example logs network related activity at the computer. The example online activity monitor 304 logs webpages (e.g., URLs) that a user requests at the computer and/or which are pushed to the computer (e.g., pop-up windows). Alternatively, the online activity monitor 304 may log any other type of online activity or computing resource access that occurs at the computer such as, for example, purchases made by the user online, purchases made at a bricks and mortar business for which notifications are received online (e.g., via an online credit card statement or an email message), purchases monitored by an AC Nielsen Home Scanner, messages sent online (e.g., emails or instant messages), advertisements viewed on the internet, etc. The online activity monitor 304 sends logged activity to the data transmitter 308.
The offline activity monitor 302 and the online activity monitor 304 of the illustrated example are separate. For example, the offline activity monitor 302 may be a software application that is installed on the computer and the online activity monitor 304 may be a plug-in that is installed in a browser. Alternatively, the offline activity monitor 302 and the online activity monitor 304 may be integrated as a single component. For example, the offline activity monitor 302 and the online activity monitor 304 may be implemented by a single software application installed on the computer.
The clock 306 of the illustrated example provides the current date and time (i.e., a timestamp) to the data transmitter 308 for association with log information received from the offline activity monitor 302 and/or the online activity monitor 304. The clock 306 may be excluded from the meter 122 when, for example, the offline activity monitor 302 and the online activity monitor 304 include timestamp capabilities.
The data transmitter 308 of the illustrated example receives log information from the offline activity monitor 302 and the online activity monitor 304 and timestamp information from the clock 306. The data transmitter 308 of the illustrated example is implemented by a wired or wireless network card. However, any other communication device may be used to communicatively couple the activity monitor 122 to a network (e.g., the home network 118).
The data receiver 402 of the illustrated example receives advertisement and/or program information from a meter (e.g., the meter 116 of
The data store manager 404 of the illustrated example receives advertisement information, program information, and/or activity information from the data receiver 402. The data store manager also receives demographic information from the demographic interface 406. The data store manager 404 associates demographic information with the advertisement and/or program information and stores the associated information in the data store 408. The data store manager 404 also forwards the stored information to the data transmitter 410 for transmission to a central facility.
The demographic interface 406 of the illustrated example receives demographic information from a user (e.g., a member of the household 104, an agent from an audience measurement company, etc.) and transmits the demographic information to the data store manager 404 for association with monitoring information. In other words, the demographic interface 406 provides demographic information so that information about exposure to media content at the household 104 can be tied to demographic information associated with members of the household and guests. The demographic interface 406 may receive demographic information using any type of interface such as, for example, a graphical user interface provided at the home server 120, a remotely accessible graphical user interface, a demographic file received from a user or an agent of an audience measurement company), a people meter, etc. While the example home server 120 includes the demographic interface 406, the home server 120 may not include the demographic interface 406 when, for example, demographic interface is not desired or the data store manager includes an interface for receiving demographic information.
The data transmitter 410 of the illustrated example receives program information, advertisement information, activity information, and demographic information from the data store manager 404 and transmits the information to a central facility (e.g., the central facility 108). The data transmitter 410 may additionally receive requests for information from a central facility and transmit the requests to the data store manager 404. The data transmitter 410 of the illustrated example is implemented by a wired or wireless network card. However, any other communication device may be used to communicatively couple the home server 120 to a network (e.g., the home network 118).
The data receiver 502 of the illustrated example receives program information, advertisement information, activity information, and demographic information from a monitored location (e.g., the household 104 of
The advertisement ratings generator 504 of the illustrated example generates ratings information for received advertisements. Example ratings information indicates how many people have been presented with a particular advertisement. The ratings information may be generated by using any desired type(s) of formulas and/or techniques. In addition, the ratings information is grouped by demographic categories (e.g., ratings for ages 18-24, ratings for a particular race, ratings for particular gender, ratings for a particular geographic region, etc.). The generated ratings information is transmitted to the report generator 510.
The window selector 506 of the illustrated example selects activity information (e.g., webpage browsing, purchasing events, purchasing habits, computer use activity, etc.) that is associated with a time that is within a window of time for each advertisement. In other words, for each advertisement, event, data entry, etc., the example window selector 506 selects activity information for activities that took place within an amount of time beginning at a time of presentation of the advertisement and ending at some later time. For example, if a particular advertisement was presented on Jan. 18, 2008 at 6:35 PM, the window selector 506 would select all activities that took place within an amount of time from the time of broadcast of that advertisement to a certain time later (e.g., activity that occurred during the 24 hours following the advertisement). The window selector 506 transmits the advertisement (and associated metadata) and the selected activities (and associated metadata) to the metadata comparator 508. While the example window selector 506 selects activities that are within a certain time period, the window selector may alternatively transmit all activities to the metadata comparator 508 for analysis. Additionally or alternatively, the window selector 506 may operate in association with the metadata comparator 508 to select activities that include metadata identified by the metadata comparator 508. For example, after the metadata comparator 508 has identified activities within a window that are associated with an advertisement, the metadata comparator 508 may request additional activities that are associated with identified metadata. Such an analysis can be used to identify trends in activities that are affected by an advertisement (e.g., a user did not visit a particular webpage for a month and then visited the webpage within an hour of a presentation of an advertisement associated with the webpage).
The metadata comparator 508 of the illustrated example receives metadata associated with an advertisement and metadata associated with activities (e.g., activities at the computer 110 recorded by the activity monitor 122 of
The report generator 510 of the illustrated example receives the advertisement ratings from the advertisement ratings generator 504 and the advertisement-to-activity association information from the metadata comparator 508 and generates reports based on the information. The report generator 510 of the illustrated example generates an electronic report listing the ratings information for each advertisement and listing the associated activities for each advertisement. Alternatively, any other type or format of report may be generated such as, for example, a comma separated values (CSV) file including the ratings information and/or association information, a printed report hard copy, a report listing information grouped by household, a report listing information grouped by demographic, a report listing information grouped by the company associated with each advertisement, etc. The generated reports may be analyzed by an agent of an audience measurement company, may be automatically sent to the company associated with each advertisement, may be automatically sent to a television network/broadcaster, may be made available on an internet webpage, etc.
While an example system 100 to monitor advertisement exposure has been illustrated in
The example flowchart of
If an advertisement is detected in the segment (block 608), the advertisement is extracted from the segment (e.g., using the advertisement extractor 210) (block 612). Then, codes embedded in the media content are collected (e.g., using the code collector 506 and/or signatures of the advertisement are determined (e.g., using the signature extractor 214) (block 614). Next, the advertisement (or a copy thereof) is compressed to generate a copy of the advertisement having a reduced size (e.g., using the compressor 212) (block 616). Then, metadata associated with the advertisement is extracted from the advertisement and/or collected from the media content signal or equipment (e.g., the metadata builder 216 extracts metadata from the advertisement and the receiver 114 of
As shown in the example flowchart of
While
The flowchart of
While
The flowchart of
If the home server determines that it is time to transmit the information (block 806), the home server transmits the data stored in the data store to the central facility via a communication network (e.g., the communication network 106 of
While
The flowchart of
If a match between metadata associated with an activity datum and metadata associated with the advertisement is determined (block 910), the central facility associates the activity datum with the advertisement (e.g., stores a record identifying both the activity datum and the advertisement, attaches an index to both the activity datum and the advertisement, etc.) (block 912).
After determining that none of the activity data is associated with the advertisement (block 910) or after associating an advertisement with one or more of the activity data (block 912), the central facility determines if it is time to generate reports (block 914). For example, the central facility may generate a report at predetermined time intervals or upon a user request. If it is not time to generate reports (block 914), control returns to block 902 to await further data from the home server.
If it is time to generate a report (block 914), the central facility generates a report of advertisement ratings and/or advertisements associated with activity information (block 918). Control then returns to block 902 to await further data from the home server. While the example flowchart of
While
The computer platform 1000 of the instant example includes a processor 1012 such as a general purpose programmable processor. The processor 1012 includes a local memory 1014, and executes coded instructions 1016 present in random access memory 1018, coded instruction 1017 present in the read only memory 1020, and/or instructions present in another memory device. The processor 1012 may execute, among other things, the machine readable instructions represented in
The processor 1012 is in communication with a main memory including a volatile memory 1018 and a non-volatile memory 1020 via a bus 1022. The volatile memory 1018 may be implemented by Synchronous Dynamic Random Access Memory (SDRAM), Dynamic Random Access Memory (DRAM), RAMBUS Dynamic Random Access Memory (RDRAM) and/or any other type of random access memory device. The non-volatile memory 1020 may be implemented by flash memory and/or any other desired type of memory device. Access to the main memory 1018, 1020 is typically controlled by a memory controller (not shown) in a conventional manner.
The computer 1000 also includes a conventional interface circuit 1024. The interface circuit 1024 may be implemented by any type of well known interface standard, such as an Ethernet interface, a universal serial bus (USB), and/or a third generation input/output (3GIO) interface.
One or more input devices 1026 are connected to the interface circuit 1024. The input device(s) 1026 permit a user to enter data and commands into the processor 1012. The input device(s) can be implemented by, for example, a keyboard, a mouse, a touchscreen, a track-pad, a trackball, isopoint and/or a voice recognition system.
One or more output devices 1028 are also connected to the interface circuit 1024. The output devices 1028 can be implemented, for example, by display devices (e.g., a liquid crystal display, a cathode ray tube display (CRT), a printer and/or speakers). The interface circuit 1024, thus, typically includes a graphics driver card.
The interface circuit 1024 also includes a communication device such as a modem or network interface card to facilitate exchange of data with external computers via a network (e.g., an Ethernet connection, a digital subscriber line (DSL), a telephone line, coaxial cable, a cellular telephone system, etc.).
The computer 1000 also includes one or more mass storage devices 1030 for storing software and data. Examples of such mass storage devices 1030 include floppy disk drives, hard drive disks, compact disk drives and digital versatile disk (DVD) drives.
The example system 100 of
Although certain methods, apparatus, and articles of manufacture have been described herein, the scope of coverage of this patent is not limited thereto. To the contrary, this patent covers all methods, apparatus, and articles of manufacture fairly falling within the scope of the appended claims either literally or under the doctrine of equivalents.
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